Holyrood, made browsable

Motions, questions and answers

Every motion, amendment, parliamentary question and answer the chamber has lodged since 1999, searchable in one place.

Chamber activity

Motions, questions and answers

Last 30 days
8 motions
40 questions · up to 14 May 2026
Most-active MSP
3 motions in the last 30 days
Top topic
in 24 titles
Unanswered questions
72
Items shown
0
Motions
0
Questions
0

Covering Unknown to Unknown. 5,653 amendments linked to their parent motions. 4,903,788 recorded MSP supports. 2,901 divisions on record (1,652 carried, 1,188 defeated).

Most common

What kinds of items appear

Written Question 205,373 Standard Motion 62,939 Portfolio Question 10,757 General Question 8,984 Motion For Debate 5,266 Members' Business Motion 5,191 Bureau Motion 5,015 Amendment 3,755 First Minister's Question 3,570 SPCB Written Question 1,616 Inspired Question 1,589 Topical Question 983
Year by year

How many items per year

Showing 0 of 0 matching items in session S6, 16 May 2025 – 16 May 2026. Latest 30 days: 48.
Reference Item MSP Type Date (desc)
Nothing matches those filters — try a broader search or clear a filter.
← Back to list
Question

Untitled item

S6W-04906 · Written Question · lodged by Lumsden, Douglas

Lodged on
03 Dec 2021
Heard / answered on
23 Dec 2021
To ask the Scottish Government (a) how many and (b) what percentage of people in the NHS Grampian area who were referred for cancer treatment in (a) 2020 and (b) 2021 started treatment within the 62-day target.

The answer

Data published by Public Health Scotland covering the period 01 January 2020 to 30 September 2021 shows that in NHS Grampian 83.7 % eligible referrals started treatment within the 62 day standard in 2020 and 78.2% in 2021. Representing 1081 of 1,291 referrals in 2020 and 815 of 1,042 referrals in 2021.
Further breakdown of this data can be accessed at Cancer waiting times - 1 July to 30 September 2021 - Cancer waiting times - Publications - Public Health Scotland .
Boards are continuing to prioritise new cancer patients being referred with a suspicion of cancer - this is closely monitored through weekly performance meetings with officials and reflected in Boards’ Remobilisation Plans.
A refresh of the Framework for Effective Cancer Management is underway and will support clinicians and NHS managers to drive improvements in cancer pathways, providing Health Boards with the tools to effectively manage cancer patients and ultimately recover waiting times.
£10 million of funding has been directed to support cancer waiting times improvements in NHS Scotland across 2021-22, including up-skilling nurses and investing in diagnostic tests to extended working days and weekend working, to increase capacity and see/treat cancer patients as timely as possible. NHS Grampian received £974,000 as a share of the funding.

Answered by Humza Yousaf on 23 Dec 2021.